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The proposed settlement will allow Niantic to keep these Pokemon

The proposed settlement will allow Niantic to keep these Pokemon locations within its parks and on property for up to a year, but not for more than a year. This will allow the players to opt out of Pokemon Go's "No, no, no, no" system. At least, that's what the settlement proposal's "solution" would have us believe.

The proposed settlement would be $5 million to $10 million in annual settlements. Niantic will also pay Niantic employees to respond to the lawsuit, which could be as early as January. However, if the player is not willing to voluntarily opt out, Niantic isn't willing to pay that amount either.

In a recent report, the company states that the proposed settlement will "take away from the game's original value by allowing Niantic to continue to maintain the status quo through litigation."

Pokémon Go is currently available on both iOS and Android. As of September 20, 2015, a new version of Pokémon Go, dubbed "Aliens," was released for iOS and Android.A former high school student is suing the school district of Chicago over a sexual harassment policy that she claims violated her constitutional right as a student. The lawsuit was filed by Erica J. Smith, 30, who is suing the Chicago School System and the principal of the Chicago Public Schools.

"I was on my way to class and at my parents' house when I heard that the principal had come up to me and told me that my 'no' meant no punishment," Smith told The Daily Beast in an interview. "I was sitting down to get my class in the middle of the night and my parents came by and said, 'What are you going to do? You're going to get into trouble!' The principal came up to my parents and said, 'What are you going to do?' I was in shock and I didn't know what to make of it."

In the letter, Smith wrote that she was bullied by her classmates and was told that she was "not a good student." On her way to class, she was told at a teacher's office that "she has to be on her own because she is a girl."

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